Treasure Coast News, Business and Community April 2013 | Page 24

24 - TCnbc Magazine

Spring Gardening on the

Treasure Coast

Spring annuals can provide both color and fragrance to your yard, but you must ensure that all risk of frost and severely cold weather is past.

Annuals provide dependable color for months with only occasional attention. What's not to love about annuals? "For Southern gardens in particular, where summer lasts so long, annuals are indispensable," says Troy Marden, garden designer and flower expert with Moore & Moore West Garden Center in Nashville.

Tell Me Why

Consistent color and texture are a few of the virtues of annuals. Some tough-as-nails plants last the entire summer, while others, such as petunias, may go only to the halfway mark but are well worth it. "You don't have to plant your annuals 5,000 deep like a mall parking lot," Troy says. "They're just as effective in small groups throughout the garden."

Here are some ideas to get you started.

•Plant annuals by your front door for curb appeal. Accent path entrances with a mass planting, or draw attention to a special place in the garden.

•Use them to bridge the gap between perennial bloom cycles in borders.

•Try them in containers and hanging baskets to put color where you want it.

Easy To Grow

•Loosen the roots with your fingers, especially if they are in a tight mass.

•Plant annuals in well-drained soil.

•Sprinkle a timed-release, granular fertilizer such as 14-14-14 under each annual when planting.

•Surround new plants with a light layer of mulch.

•Water every few days until roots become established--within a few weeks. Then continue on an as-needed basis.

•Give them a thorough trim in July. Cut your annuals back by half, and feed them twice over the next 10 days with a liquid, blossom-boosting fertilizer such as 15-30-15.

This article is from the March 2005 issue of Southern Living.